The Borg were introduced before Battlestar Galactica was on screen so no.Answer:Battlestar Galactica (and the Cylons) were a 1978 TV series. Star Trek (and the Borg) didn't get together until the 1986 Next Generation episodes. So if you consider malevolent mechanical critters to be all the same the Cylons preceded the Borg by 18 years. However menacing machines have been a standard feature of science fiction for many years (even before Star Trek) and the idea could have come from many sources. As an example Dr. Who's Daleks or Fred Saberhagan's Berserkers.There are few overlaps between the two sets of villains - Borg are a hive mind grown and changed by grafting human and artificial bits together, the Cylons (at least in the original Galactica) were essentially robots with independent capacities.
It can be said that both wars were brought to a stalemate. The first war ended when the Final Five arrived from Earth and called for a ceasefire between the Cylons and Man in exchange for giving the Cylons human bodies and resurrection technology. The second war (following the mass genocide of the Colonies) was brought to end essentially when the rebel Cylon basestar gained political representation among the new Fleet government following Tom Zerak's coup. From then on, Cylons are considered equals amongst the human survivors. The war with the greater Cylon population is brought to a ceasefire when the Final Five promise to re-reinvent resurrection for Cavil and the others in exchange for Hera and and end to the war. This point is mostly moot since the Colony ship is destroyed in a black hole and the Cylons have no other way to track the humans to their new Earth.
We already did. That battle was fought some 2000 years ago.
I believe it was the battle of willow creek
No, because he is an authoritarian leader. He lies to the international community about the serious problems in his country concerning;- human rights abuses, justice, national unity and reconciliation. Kagame is the worst dictator I have ever seen/heard of.
The Borg were introduced before Battlestar Galactica was on screen so no.Answer:Battlestar Galactica (and the Cylons) were a 1978 TV series. Star Trek (and the Borg) didn't get together until the 1986 Next Generation episodes. So if you consider malevolent mechanical critters to be all the same the Cylons preceded the Borg by 18 years. However menacing machines have been a standard feature of science fiction for many years (even before Star Trek) and the idea could have come from many sources. As an example Dr. Who's Daleks or Fred Saberhagan's Berserkers.There are few overlaps between the two sets of villains - Borg are a hive mind grown and changed by grafting human and artificial bits together, the Cylons (at least in the original Galactica) were essentially robots with independent capacities.
It can be said that both wars were brought to a stalemate. The first war ended when the Final Five arrived from Earth and called for a ceasefire between the Cylons and Man in exchange for giving the Cylons human bodies and resurrection technology. The second war (following the mass genocide of the Colonies) was brought to end essentially when the rebel Cylon basestar gained political representation among the new Fleet government following Tom Zerak's coup. From then on, Cylons are considered equals amongst the human survivors. The war with the greater Cylon population is brought to a ceasefire when the Final Five promise to re-reinvent resurrection for Cavil and the others in exchange for Hera and and end to the war. This point is mostly moot since the Colony ship is destroyed in a black hole and the Cylons have no other way to track the humans to their new Earth.
Admiral Adama estimates at the end of Daybreak Pt. III that there are approximately 38,000 human survivors that reach "Earth." This is a rough estimate considering that an unstated number die in the attack on the Colony.
With two different versions of Battlestar Galactica - the 1978-80 version created by Glen Larson and the 2003-8 version created by Ronald Moore - there are two different types of Cylons. In the 1978-80 version the Cylons are a race of fully-evolved saurian beings who allowed themselves to be overcome by their own technology (in the episode "War Of The Gods" it is strongly inferred that the mysterious Count Iblis had a hand in this; subsequent stories in comic book adaptations in the 1990s fully explored Iblis' role in the creation of the Cylons) and were transmuted from living beings to armored cybernauts, led by Imperious Leader, a machine being swathed in the reptilian husk of his previous incarnation as a living being.There are civilian Cylons who control the empire's far-flung worlds (viewed briefly in the episode "The Living Legend") and the warrior class of armored knights sporting red eye scanners. They are commanded by the IL series of sentient computer beings; Lucifer, the second-in-command of Baltar (played by John Colicos in the 1978-80 series and revived for the 1999 promotional film), is the best-known of Cylon ILs.The 2003-8 version features the Cylons as a race of machines created by humans who rebelled and then took over technology to create organic clones. Overall, there are 12 Cylon "human-like" models, although some people have predicted that when Earth is found in the fourth and final season, a 13th Cylon will be revealed, echoing the theme of the Thirteen Human Colonies, Earth being the 13th planet.Taken from Wikipedia: "Cylon society is made up of the seven known, mass-produced humanoid models. For a yet unrevealed reason, the final five Cylons are completely unknown to both the humans and the Cylons, and Cylons are forbidden from trying to discover their identities."Although "forbidden", one story line involves a Number Three (D'Anna, played by Lucy Lawless) killing herself trying to meet and communicate with the "Final Five". By the end of Season 3, all but the last of the unknown "final five" Cylons are revealed, leaving 11 known and one left as a mystery from her "between death" explorations. It is assumed this last unknown Cylon will be the "Number One" - the use of numbers in relation to the Patrick McGoohan series "The Prisoner" has been discussed at length, where "Number One" is never revealed.In the first episodes, we learn that Gaius Baltar's lover Caprica is a "Number Six", played by Tricia Helfer; Lucy Lawless, who first appears as a newspaper reporter D'Anna Biers, is a Number Three, and Sharon "Boomer" Agathon nee Valerii is a Number Eight, played by Grace Park.Others include a shorter, brown-haired "Business" type named Aaron Doral who is a Number Five and played by Matthew Bennett; a semi-religious unit often called The Preacher named Brother Cavil, an old man whose Number is unknown and played by well-known movie actor Dean Stockwell, as is the Number of a tall, shaved-head black man named Simon and acted by Rick Worthy.In the third season, Baltar learns he is not a Cylon when he tries to hang himself and almost dies rather than be resurrected. Although the "virtual Caprica" that Baltar often fantasies about mentions several times in Season Three that he is "The Chosen One", it seems this does not mean he is a Cylon.The final episodes of Season Three, "Crossroads I & II" reveals four of the Final Five:Samuel T. "Sam" Anders, a former star Pyramid player for the Caprica Buccaneers who is married to Starbuck and led the resistance on Caprica after the attack, acted by Michael Trucco; Galon "Chief" Tyrol, a Number Twelve who could be compared to Scotty from the original Star Trek and is played by Aaron Douglas; the Galactica's XO Saul Tigh who led the resistance on New Caprica, acted by Michael Hogan, and finally Tory Foster, the assistance to The President, played by Rekha Sharma. None of whom had any idea they were Cylons, much like Sharon "Boomer" in the first season, who later chooses to "be human" and pledges her allegiance to the Colonial Fleet and human race, and is promoted to a Leutenent.Referencing the movie "Razor" where a Cylon who is a very, very old man but humanoid warns that Kara "Starbuck" Thrace will "lead the human race to its end" and that she has been told by a "seer" as well as a Cylon that she "has a destiny" the odds are bet that she will turn out to be the final unknown Cylon, but this is all conjecture as the fourth season has not yet been aired.
No, as of the end of season 3 she has not been proved or disproved a cylon, but there is still one of the final five not yet accounted for, so it is unclear at this point. _______ My understanding is that the Cylons are either of the nuts-and-bolts or humanoid variety. Wasn't the scrappy woman pilot who shot Cain in the "Razor" prequel a Cylon? If so, then she would be the 12th. _______ There are four kinds of cylons. The non-humanoid ones (centurions, raiders etc.), the twelve humanoid models, the hybrids aboard the baseships and the human-cylon hybrids (two known to exist). Obviously there are a lot of non-humanoid cylons and they aren't really relevant to this question. Also, not much is known about the hybrids aboard the baseships (other than that they speak what seems to be nonsense and essentially control the ship) or the human-cylon hybrids (they are Nicholas Tyrol and Hera Agathon), as that has not been explored much yet on the show. But your question pretains to the humanoid cylons. Out of the twelve models, seven are known to the colonials, and we know of eleven of them. Known to the colonials are: D'Anna Biers (3, and deactivated, aka, boxed), Aaron Doral (5), Six (known by a variety of names: Caprica, Shelley Godfried, Gina, etc.) Sharon Valerii (8), Leoben Connoy (unknown), Brother Cavil (unknown), Simon (unknown). But there are five more cylons, known as the final five. They are unknown to the cylons, except for one of the 3's (revealed during Rapture), but as she is boxed, she can tell no one. We know that four of them are: Saul Tigh, Tory Foster, Samuel Anders and Galen Tyrol. These cylons are different from the others, at least in the case of Colonel Tigh, there is a significant personal history which is absent in the seven models, they are suspectible to illness (Sam suffered pneumonia on New Caprica, Tigh is an alcoholoic) and more prone to injury (in comparison with the other seven cylons). That leaves one cylon model left unaccounted for. I personally find it unlikely that Kara Thrace would be that final cylon. Given her apparent resurrection and recent events, I think that would add up just a little too easily for this show. I doubt she is a cylon, but clearly the other characters suspect that she might be and who knows what's going on in her head.
Human Resource Manager being in company managerial position, cannot be an union leader.
battle of trafalagar
How Human Are You - 2014 Follow the Leader 1-3 was released on: USA: 27 March 2014
In the television series "Battlestar Galactica," the thirteenth colony is called "Earth." However, it is revealed later in the series that Earth was not the thirteenth colony of the Twelve Colonies but rather a distant planet that the survivors of the Twelve Colonies were searching for as a new home.
No, but I herd he lieks mudkipz.
The leader is oxygen - 65 %.
It's no good!